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Does Chiapetti Have Proof that Turner Dropped the Ball?

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LETTER CONTAINS ACCUSATIONS

A matter involving a popular basketball coach who’s no longer at the helm of one of New Mexico’s most successful girls basketball programs has raised questions among Gallup High School students and their parents. A letter kept guarded until its recent release to the Sun doesn’t fully clarify the situation, and some suggest the matter needs further investigation.

A two-page letter dated July 25, 2016, sent from Gallup-McKinley County Schools Superintendent Frank Chiapetti to Gallup High School girls basketball coach Kamau Turner gives notice that Turner’s coaching contract with the McKinley district is null and void.

“I am writing you as Superintendent of Schools for Gallup-McKinley County to give notice that you will not be issued an employment contract as a coach for the school district for the 2016-2017 school year,” Chiapetti begins the letter. “Your Title IX compliance, now and in the past, and the financial oversight of your program has been suspect, at best, and the combining of your official duties as a coach with your participation in a third-party fundraising entity makes your continued employment as coach impossible.”

Title IX is part of the U.S. Educational Amendments of 1972. It states that no person shall be excluded from participation in, be denied benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity that receives federal financial assistance on the basis of sex.

The letter continues: “While the investigation into your financial oversight and interaction with Full Court Prestige Club is still ongoing, the appearance of a conflict of interest, at this time, is too great to ignore, and I find it is not in the best interests of the student athletes involved in the program for you to be a coach.”

It is not immediately clear as to how Title IX figures in to the Turner situation, and the July 25 letter sent to Turner by Chiapetti does not elaborate on that detail.

Joan Nez, secretary for the Gallup-McKinley County Schools’ Board of Education, asked that the question be put to the school district in the form of an email.

There was no response to the Sun as of press time.

The matter stems from what folks at a recent McKinley County Board of Education meeting call a big misunderstanding, notions based on club-versus-school-district funds.

Gloria Watts, a retired educator and Turner’s mother, spoke at the meeting and advised the board to take action against the Chiapetti directive. The allegations are false and bogus, she suggested.

She said that she believes Chiapetti is mistaking the full Court Prestige Club for a public entity. She said the club is private, and therefore not subject to school district regulations.

Watts is a cousin of former U.S. Congressman J.C. Watts of Oklahoma, who made headlines as a rare black Republican who served the U.S. House of Representatives. J.C. Watts was also the starting quarterback for the University of Oklahoma in the late 1970s.

Turner, who has coached the Lady Bengals since 2009, continues to teach full-time at Gallup High School, and Chiapetti’s letter did not reference the teaching side of his role at the school. But school-board meeting attendees say they want Turner back as coach.

“This is an attempt to make [Turner] look bad in public,” Watts said of the contents of the Chiapetti letter.

The Sun requested the letter in question from the school district, but last week Chiapetti responded by saying a copy would have to be obtained through a formal New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act request. A copy of the letter was provided to The Sun by alternative means.

“This is the continuation of a pattern of harassment by Chiapetti toward Coach Turner,” Watts said after the meeting. “What [Chiapetti] is doing is an escalating attempt to mar Coach Turner’s relationship with the community and the school and the state. Plain and simple, this is an attempt to destroy the Gallup High School girls basketball program.”

The team is respected around New Mexico and the United States, with frequent post-season appearances by the team over the years.

A girls’ basketball coach at Gallup High has not been named this year and Gallup athletic director James Malcolm told the Sun last week that there have been no coaching interviews to date.

Gallup High went 28-1 in District 1-5A in 2015 and was ranked as high as No. 49 in the country.

Turner, who grew up in Oklahoma, has not returned repeated telephone requests for comment on the matter nor has first-year GHS Principal Dominic Romero. Romero is a former athletic director at the school.

Watts said the Turner family is in the midst of hiring an employment attorney to oversee the matter. The school district appears adamant in its stance.

“It is the school district’s hope that this matter can be resolved amicably and quickly to avoid the need for litigation,” Chiapetti concludes in the letter.

Meanwhile, Watts said she has sent an IPRA request to Joan Nez, superintendent secretary and the McKinley school district’s custodian of records, and asked for athletics equity data reports spanning 2009 through 2013.

By Bernie Dotson

Sun Correspondent

GLP announces groundbreaking for Gallup Energy Logistics Park

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GGEDC, BNSF to be on hand

Officials at the Greater Gallup Economic Development Corporation, Gallup Land Partners, LLC, along with officials from McKinley County, the city of Gallup, and various officials from the state of New Mexico are set to get together Oct. 17 for a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of the Gallup Energy Logistics Park.

The $4 million project,  which will begin operations in January 2017, will provide business within its 2,500-acre area, premier shipping, and logistic services of long-haul freight from highway to rail.

“Growing our region’s transportation network will benefit our business and our community as a whole,” Patricia Lundstrom, executive director at GGEDC, said. “I am thrilled that Gallup Land Partners is making this investment, as the new facility will enable increased trucking and shipping in northwest New Mexico.”

In the past, representatives from GGEDC, McKinley County, and the city have lauded the impact of the facility.

“We are excited to have Gallup Land Partners make this investment in the community. We know the importance of rail in our region, and the start of this work emphasizes just that,” Tommy Haws, GGEDC board president, said. “This terminal will not only help connect McKinley County’s businesses to the global marketplace, but it will also help stimulate the Gallup-McKinley County economy.”

Robert Roche, president of Roche Enterprises, the company that owns GLP, said the investment will transform an industrial space into a modern and state-of-the-art facility.

“None of this would be possible without the vision, dedication and commitment of our many partners in this project, including the [GGEDC], McKinley County, the city of Gallup, and the state of New Mexico,” Roche said.

According to Roche, construction of the terminal will begin in November, with initial activity focused on clearing the site to prepare for major construction. The target completion date is set for January 2017.

Gallup Mayor Jackie McKinney offered kudos on the long-anticipated project.

“We are pleased to welcome Gallup Land Partners,” he said. “The city of Gallup has a long history with the railroad and we are excited to begin the next chapter.”

McKinney added that since the site was announced in 2014, the project has received broad-based support from local, county, state, and federal-level officials, as well as from economic development associations and various other stakeholders.

GGEDC is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that is the primary economic development umbrella of the city of Gallup and McKinley County.

The Oct. 17 groundbreaking introduction is scheduled for noon at the Gallup Cultural Center, 201 E. Hwy. 66. Groundbreaking will take place starting at 1:30 pm at the logistics park, three miles north of Gallup. For more information, call GGEDC at (505) 722-2980.

Bernie Dotson contributed to this report. Michael Sage is deputy director for the GGEDC.

By Michael Sage
For the Sun

Gallup launches new tourism website

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$80K site created to expand tourism, marketing

Along with annual attractions like the Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial and the Red Rock Balloon Rally, the city of Gallup recently unveiled a new form of tourist attraction — an interactive website that lets users see the city through the eyes of its visitors.

Gallup Acting Tourism and Marketing Manager Jennifer Lazarz introduced the website, GallupRealTrue.com, to the public at the Sept. 27 City Council meeting. She presented features the website offers via  PowerPoint presentation and said the way people interact when it comes to the Internet and travelling has changed over the years.

According Lazarz, the new site will put the city ahead of the curve.

The website’s launch coincides with Gallup’s ‘GallupRealTrue’ marketing campaign.

“I have gotten a lot of positive feedback from people regarding the new website,” Lazarz said after the meeting. “Most think it’s informative and interesting.”

The website was developed by HK Advertising and the Idea Group of Santa Fe. The cost to the city is $40,000, which includes a matching amount from the state.

The site has information about museums, galleries, ArtsCrawl, the El Rancho Hotel, places to stay, and tidbits about Old Historic Highway 66. An arts and culture component concentrates on Native American jewelry and culture.

Bill Lee, executive director at the Gallup-McKinley County Chamber of Commerce, said a tourism website for any city must have listings, events, and general travel information. But, he said, what really excites travelers is discovering a new place.

“You want to give a presentation that tells visitors what the city is all about,” Lee said. “That is what makes it so unique. Every detail, to the photography and text, is important.”

The city of Gallup entered into a $185,000 professional services agreement with the Chamber of Commerce a few months ago for marketing services.

An “enjoy the outdoors” component of the website sheds light on attractions like the Red Rock Balloon Rally, rodeos, hiking and biking, and team sports. Another section of the site allows users to view lodging locations and offers booking links, too.

“I think it’s fun, it’s exciting, it’s energetic and it’s informational,” City Councilman Allan Landavazo said of the site. “I think it’s well done and it looks really, really good.”

Lazarz said she’ll update the site periodically. She took over city tourism duties about two months ago when the former tourism manager decided to call it quits.

By Bernie Dotson
Sun Correspondent


Gallup man sentenced to 10 years for federal meth trafficking conviction

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Staff Reports

Diaz prosecuted as part of “worst of the worst” anti-violence initiative

ALBUQUERQUE – Dexter Diaz, 32, of Gallup, was sentenced in federal court in Albuquerque on Oct. 11 to 120 months in prison for his conviction on a methamphetamine trafficking charge.

Diaz will be on supervised release for five years following his prison sentence.

The sentence was announced by U.S. Attorney Damon P. Martinez, Special Agent in Charge Will R. Glaspy of the DEA’s El Paso Division, McKinley County Sheriff Ronald Silversmith, and Chief Timothy Trimble of the Zuni Pueblo Tribal Police Department.

Diaz, whose criminal history includes felony convictions for three drug trafficking crimes, is being prosecuted as part of the federal “worst of the worst” anti-violence initiative.

Under the initiative, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and federal law enforcement agencies work with New Mexico’s District Attorneys and state, local and tribal law enforcement agencies to target violent or repeat offenders primarily based on their prior felony convictions for federal prosecution with the goal of removing repeat offenders from communities in New Mexico for as long as possible.

Because New Mexico’s violent crime rates, on a per capita basis, are amongst the highest in the nation, New Mexico’s law enforcement community is collaborating to target repeat offenders from counties with the highest violent crime rates, including McKinley County, under this initiative.

Diaz was arrested in September of 2015, on an indictment charging him with distributing methamphetamine on March 26, 2015, in McKinley County. The indictment included forfeiture allegations requiring Diaz to forfeit $1,600 in drug proceeds to the United States.

On Feb. 25, 2016, Diaz entered a guilty plea to the indictment.  In entering the guilty plea, Diaz admitted that on March 26, 2015, he sold two ounces of methamphetamine to another person for $1,600.

This case was investigated by the Albuquerque office of the DEA, the McKinley County Sheriff’s Office and the Zuni Pueblo Tribal Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas Jon Ganjei is prosecuting the case.

IS HOOP HERO’S JOB ON THE LINE?

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A mystery surrounds the Gallup High School athletic department.

A high-profile coach is no longer the head coach of the Lady Bengals’ basketball team, and the program – one of New Mexico’s most successful – stands at a crossroads, with only Superintendent Frank Chiapetti privy to the direction in which the situation is headed. And he’s keeping answers about the matter guarded.

“It’s a personnel matter,” Chiapetti said through a school-district phone receptionist Oct. 4, when the Sun asked for clarification on the matter. “You’ll have to submit a formal request to the school district’s attorney to get a copy of the letter.”

The Sun submitted a request for the letter under the New Mexico Inspection of Public Records Act on Oct. 5.

The letter in question was sent some weeks ago to Lady Bengals’ head coach Kamau Turner, and it came from the school district’s main office, according to GHS Athletic Director James Malcolm.

Like Chiapetti, Malcolm wouldn’t say much. Dominic Romero, principal at Gallup High, did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

“There was a letter sent about the coaching status of the girls basketball team,” Malcolm said. “I can tell you that we have not had any interviews as far as the girls coaching job is concerned. That’s about all I know at the moment.”

During the public comment portion of the Oct. 3 school-board meeting, several parents spoke out against the secrecy of the school district, which is not letting parents or students in on Turner’s job status.

Turner, an Oklahoma native, has coached the Lady Bengals since 2010. His job stint includes a 28-1 2015 season wherein the District 1-5A Lady Bengals lost to Roswell 59-41 at state and were ranked as high as No. 49 in the U.S.

Turner’s job status, and the silence by school officials on the matter, has the Gallup sports community waiting for answers.

“It’s a slap in the face. He’s done a great job. Look at all the banners on the wall,” Paulette Begay, whose daughter plays for the Lady Bengals, told school board members Oct. 3.

“That’s our pride and joy. He believes in the girls so much. Get our coach back in there,” Begay said to applause from an audience that included both Bengal players and parents.

Jennifer Gillson, also a parent of a child who attends a Gallup-McKinley County school, took issue with the way the board deals with most matters.

“We are Gallup Strong,” Gillson said. “Gallup Strong.”

Gillson talked about the need for the school district to fix the potholes – she mentioned Crownpoint and Tohatchi — parents must fathom on a daily basis when dropping their kids off to school. With the start of basketball season about a month away, Gillson and Begay asked the panel to quickly resolve the head-coach matter.

“He deserves to be where he wants to be,” Begay told board members. “Do it for the kids.”

At least one parent who spoke during the public segment said she thinks Turner received the letter at the end of July. She didn’t elaborate on the comment.

Begay said school officials are making matters worse by not acting, adding that the girls continuously inquire about their coach.

GHS

The Gallup High Lady Bengals open the 2016 basketball season Nov. 9 in an away-game against Shiprock High School.

Turner, who teaches full-time at Gallup High, attended the Oct. 3 meeting, but did not speak. He has produced winning teams of superb individual talent like that of N’Aisha McIntosh who graduated last year and is now a freshman at New Mexico Junior College in Hobbs.

By Bernie Dotson
Sun Correspondent

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